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In the latest of his inimitable works of reportage, John McPhee has written the story of the life and career of Theodore B. Taylor, a relatively unknown man who has been one of the most inventive nuclear scientists of our time. Ted Taylor is a theoretical physicist who was for many years a conceptual designer of atomic bombs. At Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, he conceived and designed the largest-yield fission bomb ever exploded by any nation. Another of his bombs was, in its time, the lightest and smallest ever made. Taylor later became the leader of a secret scientific effort, financed by the federal government, to make a spaceship the size of a sixteen-story building. The ship was of his invention and was to be called Orion. Powered by two thousand atomic bombs, exploding one at a time, it would move very rapidly to Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and Pluto. The Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty of 1963 ended the project (but if human beings ever achieve travel much beyond the moon, some such vehicle will carry them).
The course of Taylor's own career--beginning in 1949 in Los Alamos, continuing through Orion, and eventually coming round to the attempt to protect millions of kilograms of bomb material from catastrophic misuse--closely follows the perhaps boomeranging history of the use of atomic energy. |
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